The 1984 Nobel Peace Prize recipient Desmond Tutu has announced his retirement from public life, though he said he would continue his work with the Elders, a group of international leaders he cofounded in 2007. Tutu was an indefatigable critic of apartheid in South Africa, drawing international attention to the iniquities of the system. In 1985 Tutu was installed as Johannesburg’s first black Anglican bishop, and in 1986 he was elected the first black archbishop of Cape Town. In the 1990s he propagated the idea of South Africa as “the Rainbow Nation.” In 1995 South African President Nelson Mandela appointed Tutu head of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and it is here where Tutu’s life intersected with Britannica.

In April 2010 Britannica published a new article by Tutu on the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission. As he wrote for Britannica, the TRC was:

confronted by a number of challenges, as it was not accepted by all parties to the conflict. The top echelons of the military did not cooperate with the commission….Senior politicians in the former government and senior leaders in the security forces did not apply [for amnesty]. In the case of the liberation movements, the members argued that as they had conducted a “just war,” they were not required to apply for amnesty because their actions did not constitute gross violations of human rights. It took considerable effort to persuade them to participate in the amnesty process.

A key weakness of the commission was that it did not focus sufficiently on the policies or political economy of apartheid. The failure to examine the effect and impact of apartheid’s policies resulted in the need for the perpetrators, or the “trigger-pullers,” to bear the collective shame of the nation and let those who benefitted from apartheid to escape responsibility. The link between racialized power and racialized privilege became obscured.

The legacy of the commission was also compromised as the post-Mandela government was slow to implement the TRC’s recommendations, including the reparations program….Furthermore, a number of high-ranking officials from the security forces, including former minister of law and order Adriaan Vlok, were given suspended sentences through a plea-bargain process under new prosecutorial guidelines ostensibly meant to facilitate prosecutions. The failure to prosecute disillusioned many victims and encouraged the view that the government had strengthened impunity and that the beneficiaries of apartheid had escaped accountability for their actions.

Despite these weaknesses, Tutu noted that:

the TRC was internationally regarded as successful and showed the importance of public participation in such processes, including the initial decision-making process leading up to the establishment of a truth commission. The hearings of the TRC attracted global attention, as it was the first commission to hold public hearings in which both victims and perpetrators were heard. While amnesties are generally considered inconsistent with international law, the South African TRC provided some basis for considering conditional amnesties as a useful compromise, particularly if they help to secure perpetrator confessions.

The South African TRC…was hailed as an innovative model for building peace and justice and for holding accountable those guilty of human rights violations. At the same time, it laid the foundation for building reconciliation among all South Africans…The South African TRC has provided the world with another tool in the struggle against impunity and the search for justice and peace.

Britannica is proud to count Tutu as one of the more than 100 Nobelists who have written for us and wishes Tutu well in his retirement from public life.